Search This Blog

Subscribe to this blog

Follow by Email

Fellow Bookworms

{Review} WILDMAN by J.C Geiger

"Lance HENDRICKS WAS somewhere around Baring, Washington, on the edge of a great northern wilderness, when his car began to die. The speedometer's needle went first. A ninety-degree ping, straight up the center, where it hovered like a slender middle finger, then went slipping off to the right. Fifty-five, seventy, ninety-five. Then zero. Infinity. "Hey," Lance said.The needle was gone. It was 3:35 p.m. At that moment, 370 miles away, his friends were preparing for the party of a lifetime. Piping vodka into a hollow watermelon. Regulating the hot tub. Sticking Post-its to the bedroom doors of Jonathan's vactioning parents and siblings, claiming the spaces for certain couples. "Lance + Miriam," one door would say. It would be their first overnight in a bedroom together. In Bend, Oregon, this was happening. But here in Washington, on the fringes of a national forest, the speedometer had lost its needle and his car was starting to shake.

(pg.3, US arc edition)

“The kiss is music when notes disappear. No beginning or ending or wondering or stopping. The kiss is its own thing, and the only thing. His neck and shoulders relax and he and Dakota pour into one another until everything is humming. He is breathing for the first time in eighteen years and thinking:

This can happen. This is possible."

~Lance, WILDMAN

I was so so pleasantly surprised by this book. WILDMAN by J.C. Geiger is an accidental coming of age story, sitting on the razor edge of character growth with this tension that makes it feel like you're reading a hundred action scenes at once. On the surface the plot seems pretty average; teen boy's car breaks down in the middle of nowhere, teen boy is duly distressed because he's missing out on a stellar party to end all parties where he was going to have a bedroom all to himself and his gorgeous girlfriend. In a perfect world, or perhaps an imperfect one, Lance our main character would have gotten his car fixed in a night and then drifted back to Bend to continue a life path that he's never felt fully connected too.

But in Baring, Washington Lance finds his bearing (SEE WHAT I DID THERE) through a series of out of character adventures with other interesting personalities. Really it starts the second he starts interacting with other people, because he's a boy whose life has been wrapped around pleasing the expectation of those around him; perfect student, perfect trumpet player, going to be a bank teller because everyone responsible knows you can't make a living off of music. In this small town Lance is suddenly awash with a sense of possibility because no one here knows him, which means he can reinvent himself. Suddenly he's hungry for that, for reinvention and rebellion; it's like he's been subconsciously building himself an internal chrysalis all his life and he was just waiting for the exact right scenario for that much needed metamorphosis. Lance + Baring = SOMETHING MORE.

It's so cool to witness, especially through the beautifully written narrative. The author has a way of writing that isn't too flowery and perfectly captures the thoughts of a teenage boy, but hits you right in the feels unexpectedly. The other characters in this book challenge Lance, they unknowingly or perhaps knowingly in some cases support the wildness in his spirit and help him free himself. They are all wild too in one way or another, wildly lost or wildly seeking. One of the best lines in the book is a thought about how odd it is when it feels like strangers understand you better than yourself. Dakota is the person Lance connects with the most in this story, and they have the best sort of affect upon each other. What is meant to be just one night turns into two, turns into three, turns into this itching knowledge that Lance doesn't want to go back home to Bend to be a bank teller.

This book is driven by intriguing characters and like I said before, absolutely gorgeous writing. The internal tension Lance feels is palpable, in the way his restless legs start to jackhammer when he's feeling trapped or worked up, in the way he sees Dakota and both envies and admires her free spirit. It's in the way that given the opportunity he absolutely explodes with this need for adventure and challenge, how the only thing he really takes with him from Bend is his love of his trumpet. And when Wildman Lance from Baring, Washington is forced to collide with Bend, Oregon's Lancelot . . . well I can tell you that it's one of my favorite parts of the entire book because every singe somewhat normal scene suddenly feels like it's exploding with horror movie level anxiety.

Is this one of those stories where the character has an existential awakening and then sadly bottles it up and returns to their scheduled life? Or does Lance chance this new feeling as far as it will take him and claim this new and wild sense of self? I won't answer that, you'll have to pick up Wildman by J.C. Geiger for yourself.

~*~

CONTENT RATINGS

Content Ratings: highlight between ( ) for details

Romance: PG15 ( There is kissing and a sex scene, though the latter is not overtly graphic in my opinion)

Language: PG13 (There is cursing present in this book, mostly the f word.)

Violence:PG13 ( A car accident scene that involves bloodshed, a few other moments of violence and an instance of death)

Other: --

~*~

COVERDESIGN:

To be honest I was not drawn in by this cover when I first picked it up. There's symbolism in it from the book, but it won't make sense to the reader until after the story has been read. .

~*~

OFFICIALINFO:

Title: WILDMAN

Author: J.C. Geiger

Release Date: July 4th, 2017

Publisher: Disney-Hyperion

Received: For Review

SUMMARY:

“How can a total stranger understand you better than the people you’ve known your entire life?” When Lance’s ’93 Buick breaks down in the middle of nowhere, he tells himself Don’t panic. After all, he’s valedictorian of his class. First-chair trumpet player. Scholarship winner. Nothing can stop Lance Hendricks. But the locals don’t know that. They don’t even know his name. Stuck in a small town, Lance could be anyone: a delinquent, a traveler, a maniac. One of the townies calls him Wildman, and a new world opens up. He’s ordering drinks at a roadhouse. Jumping a train. Talking to an intriguing older girl who is asking about his future. And what he really wants. As one day blurs into the next, Lance finds himself drifting farther from home and closer to a girl who makes him feel a way he’s never felt before—like himself.

Comments

Post a Comment

Popular Posts

The point of Splash into Summer is to expose you to books you may have never heard of before, right? Introduce you to mermaids and kelpies and narwhals and selkies and all kinds of wonderful underwater creatures. If we're doing our jobs right, you'll add several new titles to your TBR pile by the time the event is done.

Well, we want to help you out!

Both A Backwards Story and Oh, Magic Hour are giving away a splashy book to one of you!
Yep, each. All you have to do is fill out the following form on one of our blogs and you'll be entered into both giveaways.
Easy-peasy, right?

Simply fill out the Rafflecopter form below.

If you win, you can choose ANY BOOKthat Emily, her co-blogger Danie, or I review/feature during Splash into Summer from August 10th to 24th.

For two weeks, come celebrate mermaids, whether it’s winter or summer where you live. Splash into Summer runs from June 28th to July 12th. There will be author interviews, guest posts, giveaways, reviews, and more! Now is the time to celebrate mermaids, especially with so many new novels about them coming out.

Having read so many mermaid novels and tales, I consider myself an underwater connoisseur.Here are a few fun tidbits I’ve discovered:When mermaids have a picnic on the rocks, instead of blankets, they lay out intricately woven seaweed carpets and eat foods such as seaweed soufflé and plankton pie. In 2011, i09 released an article revolving around Mer-physics.It talks about the ways in which the merfolk are able to use their senses underwater, from seeing, to hearing, to tasting and smell.For example, did you know that most of the mer are unable to see the color red?The color doesn’t exist at the depths in which they reside. According to many sources, mermaids mate and form li…

Thank you for taking the time to visit my blog and check out my Review Policy.

First and foremost: I only review books I enjoyed reading on this blog. Because of this, it may seem as though the reviews here are always favorable, but I am neither paid for what I type here nor am I a fan of every book I read. As a writer myself, I would never want to slam someone else's hard work. Authors put their hearts into what they write. Just because one person doesn't like a novel doesn't mean that millions of others won't love it. Just because I don't like a book doesn't mean you won't and vice versa. This is a blog for my personal opinions and I won't write bad things about an author that takes away a potential fan of that book. I may mention something I disliked in a book, but I will never post a bad review.

Primarily, I read/review more Teen books than I do adult or middle-grade fiction, but I am open to reviewing anything I have an interest in, especially in…